I am constantly amazed when people involved in the field of magnotherapy say that "no one knows how it works". I think it's because we are trying too hard to find the answer or are we are just complicating it too much? This then gives orthodox medicine and sceptics ammunition to dispute findings because of the lack of clinical studies. Clinical studies aren't necessarily the answer to the reason why something works or not, if it works, then it does, simple. No one is suggesting that it works for everyone otherwise we would all be millionaires, however the results speak for themselves and are very much in our favour. The only reason that mainstream medicine won't accept it is because you cannot patent a static magnet and therefor cannot control it's effect.
I know that some products have been granted patents but when you look at the products and it's claims then a different picture emerges, which I will discuss if anyone is interested.
One of the biggest problems that I see in Magnetic Therapy is that in the way it is distributed, one minute you are a man/woman in the street, the next you purchase a product, you are then recruited and now your an expert selling your product without a clue as to how it works and the only answer you get when you want to find out more is " no one knows" so say nothing. Very convenient and gives all the ammunition to the sceptics that they want.
A recent message to this site when asked whether the company supplied a product that could be worn 24 hrs instead of just at night at about £300 to £900 a time, the answer was about another £150.00 worth. Great just what a pensioner needs on a budget, if that person was ethically motivated then another companies product should be suggested to suit the needs of the person not what you've got in your company bag.
I hope I have brought up a "couple" of topics for discussion, but be warned, I meet and eat multi-level marketers every week-- and I know how it works. Ray.